Indian Govt. to soon float another Tender for Millions of Aakash Tablets!

There have been talks that Ultra Cheap Aakash tablets may be shelved over the quality of 30,000 tablets provided by Datawind in the first batch. The general feedback from users, who have had a chance to use Aakash Tablet is that, it extremely under-powered and lacks features for it to be really useful. Even the feedback received by MHRD from Aakash users has been that it is will not be of too much of help unless it is upgraded with better specifications.

One has to note that the first order of 100,000 tablets was just a pilot carried out by MHRD to understand the utility of this low cost computing device to students and achieving the desired price point. MHRD had provided funds to IIT Rajasthan to carry out this pilot. However, given the negative feedback received in field testing, IIT Rajasthan has now asked the supplier Datawind to upgrade the tablet specs for the remaining 70,000 Aakash tablets.

Datawind on their part did not agree to upgrade the tablet specs unless they were given the extra cost, which IIT Rajasthan is not willing to offer.

Even though Datawind has incurred extra cost, they have agreed to provide upgraded specs for remaining 70,000 tablets. These upgraded tablets will start getting distributed by end of January 2012.

Sources inside of MHRD have mentioned that even though pilot for Aakash Tablet was delayed and ran into some issues, they are overwhelmed with the interest Aakash has generated among students and they are confident of its utility in field of Education. Hence, they will soon be floating a tender for more than a million of Tablets (to put it exactly in their words “millions of tablets”). The work is in process and it should take few months for it to come out.

Our Conclusion: There are definitely a fall-out between IIT Rajasthan and Datawind due to poor feedback that it has received. Also, it looks like IIT Rajasthan will not be mandated with the new requirement and MHRD will be doing this on its own.

One thing I am personally sure of – If Aakash can get better specs and if price-point remains under Rs. 3000/-, it will surely be of big hit with students.

Arun Prabhudesai is founder / chief editor at trak.in. He jumped the Entrepreneurship bandwagon in early 2008 after a long 13 year stint in I.T Industry. You can follow him on twitter @trakin and Facebook.Arun’s Google+ Profile

Nice analysis. I agree Datawind cannot produce quality tablets. The ones out here are faulty, get heated up and won’t charge. Also, they are using adhesives instead of screws as noted by an Aakash owner. When confronted with these questions, Mr Tuli showed the reporter a demo model and said I am not clear about Aakash. Yes, I am not clear. They don’t pick up phones, they don’t answer emails. How can I be clear? I only know what the users told me about Aakash. My experience while helping them has been bad.

Nice analysis. I agree Datawind cannot produce quality tablets. The ones out here are faulty, get heated up and won't charge. Also, they are using adhesives instead of screws as noted by an Aakash owner. When confronted with these questions, Mr Tuli showed the reporter a demo model and said I am not clear about Aakash. Yes, I am not clear. They don't pick up phones, they don't answer emails. How can I be clear? I only know what the users told me about Aakash. My experience while helping them has been bad.

Still no one is talking about the quality and serviceabilty issues. where will the poor students go when there is a defect? God knows… hope they are able to fix it before placing their order for another million

You are right Sanchita. I have encountered some five cases about Aakash hanging and getting heated up while charging. The kind of cheap components inside the tablet may explode with that kind of heat. When contacted, those people at datawind simply give false assurances. It is like – do not expect after sales for such a cheap tablet. I recommend Magna Pepper and OLC’s $100 tablet, which is almost the same rate (without concession).
Arun
Powercut Media (India)